Aukema H M, Davidson L A, Pence B C, Jiang Y H, Lupton J R, Chapkin R S
Faculty of Nutrition, Molecular and Cell Biology Group, Texas A & M University, College Station 77843-2471, USA.
J Nutr. 1997 Jan;127(1):18-24. doi: 10.1093/jn/127.1.18.
There is great interest in utilizing butyrate as a chemotherapeutic agent. To elucidate its mechanism of action, the effect of butyrate on cAMP receptor protein kinase (PKA) activity in young adult mouse colon (YAMC) cells isolated from transgenic mice bearing a temperature sensitive mutation of the SV40 large T antigen gene was investigated. Conditionally immortalized cultures were plated at the permissive temperature (33 degrees C) or growth arrested by incubation at the nonpermissive temperature (39 degrees C). In addition, cells were incubated at 33 degrees C with or without 1 mmol/L butyrate for 24 h. Butyrate treatment reduced cell proliferation by 28% and enhanced apoptosis by 350% compared with cultures not exposed to butyrate. The PKA type I/II isozyme activity ratio was lower (P < 0.05) in cells incubated with butyrate. The relative level of PKA I isozyme was higher in proliferating cells at 33 degrees C (63% of total PKA), while the relative level of PKA II was higher in nonproliferating cells undergoing apoptosis at 39 degrees C (59% of total PKA). Neither incubation conditions (33 vs. 39 degrees C) nor butyrate treatment altered total PKA activity. When YAMC cells were incubated with 8-CI-cAMP, an activator of PKA II, growth was markedly inhibited in cells at both temperatures. Consistent with in vitro data, increased PKA I isozyme levels were associated with dysregulated growth in vivo. Specifically, the relative level of PKA I isozyme was three- to fivefold higher in rat colonic tumors compared with normal nontransformed colonic mucosa. These data indicate that the biological effects of butyrate on colonocyte proliferation and apoptosis are associated with changes in PKA isozyme-dependent signal transduction, and the YAMC cell line is a relevant model to examine the molecular mechanisms by which dietary-derived factors affect relative cancer risk.
人们对利用丁酸盐作为化疗药物有着浓厚的兴趣。为了阐明其作用机制,研究了丁酸盐对从携带SV40大T抗原基因温度敏感突变的转基因小鼠分离的成年小鼠结肠(YAMC)细胞中cAMP受体蛋白激酶(PKA)活性的影响。将条件永生化培养物接种在允许温度(33℃)下,或在非允许温度(39℃)下孵育使其生长停滞。此外,细胞在33℃下分别在有或无1 mmol/L丁酸盐的情况下孵育24小时。与未暴露于丁酸盐的培养物相比,丁酸盐处理使细胞增殖降低了28%,并使细胞凋亡增加了350%。在与丁酸盐一起孵育的细胞中,PKA I/II同工酶活性比率较低(P<0.05)。在33℃增殖细胞中PKA I同工酶的相对水平较高(占总PKA的63%),而在39℃经历凋亡的非增殖细胞中PKA II的相对水平较高(占总PKA的59%)。孵育条件(33℃与39℃)和丁酸盐处理均未改变总PKA活性。当YAMC细胞与PKA II的激活剂8-CI-cAMP一起孵育时,在两个温度下细胞的生长均受到明显抑制。与体外数据一致,PKA I同工酶水平升高与体内生长失调有关。具体而言,与正常未转化的结肠黏膜相比,大鼠结肠肿瘤中PKA I同工酶的相对水平高3至5倍。这些数据表明,丁酸盐对结肠细胞增殖和凋亡的生物学效应与PKA同工酶依赖性信号转导的变化有关,并且YAMC细胞系是研究饮食衍生因子影响相对癌症风险的分子机制的相关模型。